John Kearns wins Fosters award

Kearns – who won the newcomer award last year – said: 'I felt I did everything last year and this is crazy. Thank you for these awards, they have changed my life. I quit my job and am now a comedian.

'I wanted to come back and show I could do it again. I think it's a better show.'

'Also, I'm doing the Free Fringe, and this year some people have found it difficult. The Fringe has to change, something has to happen. Good comics who work hard... it's difficult and venues need to help those people. The Free Fringe helped me when no one would touch me. The comics are the most important people at this festival and they need to be looked after.'

'To the other nominees, you are fucking great.' And to laughs, he added: 'I'm not coming back to Edinburgh, I'm done.'

Awards producer Nica Burns said Kearns’s win was ’an extraordinary achievement, the first time a best newcomer has made the leap to best comedy show in just one year. Utterly original, completely captivating and very, very funny.’

Becoming emotional as he accepted his award, Edelman said: 'I didn't write a speech because I didn't think I was going to win. I moved over in May because every year a couple of sacrificial Americans come over and get eaten up by the festival. I didn't want to be one of them.'

'I feel there has been a huge error made as there are so many talented comic on this list.'

The panel prize went to twisted kids' show Funz And Gamez, led by stand-up Phil Ellis.

Chair of the judging panel Mark Monahan praised the 'benign but brilliant wrongness of it all' and said:'At the start of the Fringe they were not on anyone's radar at all, not least because they were listed in the children's section. It is full of mischief, it is full or originality. It is the sort of show you dream of uncovering at the Fringe.'

Elis said: 'Thank you for the support all the comedians have given this; it's word of mouth. It was quite a hard journey because no one wanted to touch it with a shitty stick. No producers liked the idea, but it's worked.'

The show also starred Will Duggan as Bonzo the Dog, Mick Ferry as Uncle Mick, James Meehan as Jim the Elf and Tom Short as Bonzo the Clown.

Frank Skinner handed over the accolades with last year's winner, Bridget Christie.

The best comedy show receives £10,000; while best newcomer and the Panel Prize winner get £5,000 each.

We see you are using AdBlocker software. Chortle relies on advertisers to fund this website so it’s free for you, so we would ask that you disable it for this site. Our ads are non-intrusive and relevant. Help keep Chortle viable.